Sunday 11 March 2018

Just Dropping In

While in London recently I took the opportunity of calling in at the refreshed IWM London.  Not familiar with the name?  We all used to know it as the Imperial War Museum; IWM also has a new museum in Manchester.

Museums can be explored with a broad brush, of course, but if you have sufficient time, or simply come across some little detail you can come away feeling very satisfied.  One gallery, Secret War, is devoted to the undercover world of espionage and covert operations.  One display lists the locations of spies who were subsequently picked up during World War Two.  I didn't need to read through the entire list, as the names Tyttenhanger and London Colney stood out clearly from familiarity.  So, let's spell out the details of the event and then return to that information I had previously acquired.


Karel Richard Richter
German from Czechoslovakia
Landed by parachute at
Tyttenhanger Park
London Colney, 13 May 1941
Arrested at Tess Road police station
Hanged 10 December 1941

What, then, was the story?

We start with the police station in Tess Road.  The road is now Woodstock Road south, and the station, in a pair of former houses now demolished was on the site of the present nursery car park.  This was a base for Hertfordshire County Police (the city police station was in Victoria Street).


Now demolished Wireless Station in Smallford
COURTESY S AMES
A war reserve constable, Alec Scott who lived at Colney Street, had the regular duty of keeping guard outside the wireless station in Oaklands Lane, Smallford, now replaced by the Radio housing estate.  When cycling home from duty late one evening he came to London Colney roundabout.  A lorry driver asking which road would take him to London, from a stranger waiting to use a phone kiosk, became suspicious about the man's accent.

The roundabout was more of a square-about in those days, had no dual carriageway, or bypass around London Colney.  The phone box was immediately to the south of the roundabout, alongside High Street.

The stranger had been dropped on the previous day and had hidden in woodland near Tyttenhanger Park, just in case his parachute had been spotted.  He had his essential gear, including wireless set, in two suitcases!  The parachute wasn't noticed, but his presence at the roundabout was.  The lorry driver passed on his suspicion to Constable Alec Scott, who questioned the stranger outside of the box, there being a caller inside – at 11.45pm.  Apparently the stranger, who was later revealed as a spy, stated he was waiting to call a hospital about his injured leg.  Constable Scott took the matter into his own hands and said he would notify the hospital on behalf of the injured party.  Good policing!  Once inside the kiosk, though, he called the Fleetville police station for back-up instead.
Much enlarged London Colney roundabout. The phone box was located at the
entrance to High Street off the picture to the right.

Karel Richard Richter was formally arrested and searched at the station, then questioned.  He was sent for trial and removed to Wandsworth Prison, from where he was later hanged.

The full story wasn't made public until 1958 when an article appeared in the Herts Advertiser (August 8th).  

Revealing a story can happen when, 77 years later, an inquisitive visitor to a museum spots a familiar landmark in a list.

2 comments:

AE Wootton said...

German spies in Glenlyn Avenue!

My parents moved into their house in Glenlyn Avenue in 1934, buying it new for £750. For two summers, between then and 1939, they accommodated visitors from Germany, having responded to an ad in the local paper, I believe. It was probably billed as a `Friendship Visit’, with a modest payment involved.

My father had been in the First War & bore no ill will towards to the Germans – probably saw it as letting bygones be bygones and, anyway, a little extra cash was always useful.

The first year they entertained Herr & Frau Kohl (possibly from Dusseldorf) – they were no trouble, out all day. All very innocent.

The following year, however, they took in a chap from Wuppertal, who had brought his bike with him and so spent his time cycling around the district. All went well until he started asking searching questions about the Ballito factory, whereupon my father rumbled him. He was told to pack his bags and leave.

It was about 30 years before my mother told the full story. It must have been very embarrassing for them but it has emerged since then that many other people were taken in like this in the Thirties.

Mike Neighbour said...

So those maps of the UK which the Germans of the time created were created with the help of prewar spies who were "innocent" guests of British householders! When I wrote about the German parachutist who came down near London Colney I did not anticipate discovering such a related story which had already occurred by 1941.

I had grandparents who lived in Lynton Avenue from new; an uncle, aunt and cousins who lived in Windermere Avenue; and now an "informant" (sorry, I couldn't resists that choice of word) from Glenlyn Avenue ! That completes the set from Goodwin & Hart's New Camp estate.

Thank you so much for letting us know these fascinating details. Mike.